The observation of Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) with very-high-energy (VHE) gamma
rays can provide understanding of the particle acceleration mechanisms in GRBs,
and can also be used to probe the extra-galactic background light and place
constraints on Lorentz invariance violation. We present prospects for GRB
detection by the ground-based HAWC (High Altitude Water Cherenkov) gamma-ray
observatory. We model the VHE spectrum of GRBs by extrapolating observations by
Fermi LAT and other observatories to higher energies. Under the assumption that
only e-pair production associated with extra-galactic background light is
responsible for high-energy cutoffs in the spectrum, we find that HAWC will
have a detection rate as high as 1.65 GRBs/year. Most of the sensitivity of
HAWC to GRBs is derived from short-hard GRBs during the prompt phase. We
explore the possibility of universal high-energy cutoffs in GRB spectra and
find that the GRB detection rate by HAWC should be at least half of this figure
as long as the typical intrinsic cutoff is above 200-300 GeV in the rest frame